THE VIRGINIA GAZETTE. VOL. VIII, NO. 43. WILLIAMSBURG, V/V, SATURDAY, MARCH 9. 1901. u M p^ y^p &amp;lt;jr. .*j ......i/TTt&amp;gt;7??yt&amp;gt;rtytvr&amp;gt;'S. ^5&amp;lt;s^ I Damon and Pythias - Dy Lealse Heiland. %&amp;amp;&amp;amp;&amp;amp;&amp;amp;?&amp;amp;?&amp;amp;. (1-&amp;gt;*y nest. ie*, by sae ialhon -tyaSeeaW.) EVE KY morn irs g. ra ir or s-hire. \. st or cold, you might ace her av --he paaaed down the atreet. One tHr&amp;gt;. ? red hand clasped the 1 a very dilapidated satchel, in ? were stored her wares; for she was a peddler in her own small a from house to house she times to find s purchaser for her 1 knit tldiea. erochetted edging and alipper patterns, but oftener to re? ceive the chilling Information that "We never buy of no peddler.-; ada uin't to home." And at the end of the day. sa she would turn into the dark street, .ind climb the rickety stairs leading to her poor little room. Sift looked iery hard to her?G...

THE VIRGINIA GAZETTE. mnnnnm^^m^^^^m^^^^^^m^^^^m^^^^m^^^^m^^^^^^m^^^hj^^^^^m^^^^^^m^^ A Ghostly Experience By Karo Davin. {COULD never conceive how nun of seeming intelligence could de bera te ly sit down and write gho?.t Stories merely as a literary diversion Snd for tbe sake of harrow mg the feelings of ths reader. A ghost story, no matter how en? tertaining lt may be. if n pure fab? rication, has no bu* I ne sa in print, for ths world is full of people so credu? lous ia disposition that the moat ab? surd things, if told with a serious air. are apt ta be accepted as the tr a Us, aad Sha grossest errora. foist? ed upon ths public by careless inven kioa. Weoaso perpetuated sa esta"-&amp;gt; tiaSed fact*. I make these ?bee rea tiona that th.* reader may become acquainted witb my views-upon subjects supernatural at tbe beginning of the narrative. Tbe Uses waa winter, and the scene of the oeaoifestetlon s lonely moor lying between ths city of Cai which ia the capital of Nevada, snd...